Donald Trump is winning the most GOP delegates in Tuesday’s contests, but Ted Cruz’s victory in Idaho is limiting Trump’s gains.

Trump will win at least 59 delegates, Cruz will win at least 44, and John Kasich will win at least 17. Marco Rubio didn’t win any delegates in Michigan or Mississippi, and was in danger of being shut out in Idaho, too.

Republican voters were also going to the polls in Hawaii.

A total of 150 Republican delegates were at stake in four states Tuesday. There were still 30 GOP delegates to be allocated, including all 19 in Hawaii.

In the overall race for delegates, Trump has 446 and Cruz has 347. Rubio has 151 delegates, and Kasich has 54.

It takes 1,237 delegates to win the Republican nomination for president.

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12:14 a.m.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz has won the Republican presidential primary in Idaho, adding a seventh state win to his tally in the 2016 White House race.

He finished ahead of GOP front-runner Donald Trump, who earlier Tuesday won the day’s two biggest prizes — the primary elections in Mississippi and Michigan.

Still to come are the results from the GOP’s caucuses in Hawaii. They’ll wrap up at 1 a.m. Eastern time, with results to follow a few hours later.

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11:52 p.m.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders says he’s ‘‘grateful to the people of Michigan for defying the pundits and pollsters’’ and delivering him a win in the state’s Democratic presidential primary.

In a statement issued after Sanders’ win over Hillary Clinton, he says, ‘‘We came from 30 points down in Michigan and we’re seeing the same kind of come-from-behind momentum all across America.’’

Sanders adds that the results ‘‘show that we are a national campaign. We already have won in the Midwest, New England and the Great Plains and as more people get to know more about who we are and what our views are, we’re going to do very well.’’

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11:31 p.m.

Bernie Sanders has won the Democratic presidential primary in Michigan, claiming victory over Hillary Clinton in an industrial Midwest state where voters expressed concerns about trade and jobs.

But despite his close win, he won’t see any real gains in delegates for the night. And Clinton has now earned more than half of the 2,383 delegates needed to clinch the Democratic nomination.

With 130 Michigan delegates at stake, Sanders will win at least 63 and Clinton at least 52. His gains will be canceled out by Clinton’s earlier win in Mississippi. She already entered the night with a 196-delegate lead over Sanders based on primaries and caucuses alone.

Democrats award delegates in proportion to the vote, so Clinton was able to add on a good chunk of delegates even after losing Michigan.

Including superdelegates, her lead becomes even bigger — at least 1,214 to Sanders’ 566.

Still, Sanders can claim a small streak of wins going into a pivotal batch of delegate-rich contests next week.

Since Super Tuesday, Sanders has now won four of the last six states holding contests. Next week, Democratic voters head to the polls in Ohio, Illinois, Missouri, North Carolina and Florida. In all, 691 delegates will be at stake.

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11:23 p.m.

Elections officials in Detroit say all is back to normal after a computer glitch caused a temporary issue with reporting results in the state’s presidential primary election.

City elections chief Daniel Baxter says Detroit for a short time Tuesday night reported to country officials a single number of votes for each candidate, a combination of both absentee ballots and those cast in person. The county sought a separate tally for each kind of vote.

Baxter says the process of starting the vote count over to report absentee votes and in-person votes separately took about 15 minutes, and did not affect the total votes cast for any candidate.

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10:56 p.m.

The Democratic race in Michigan is too close to call, but the candidates are already trying to make the most out of whatever the outcome may be.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders stepped in front of reporters late Tuesday night in Miami to argue the best is yet to come for his campaign. Sanders says he’ll do well on the West Coast, and points also to next week’s votes in Ohio and Illinois.

He says, ‘‘In poll after poll, state after state, what we have done is create the kind of momentum that we need to win.’’

Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton communications director Jennifer Palmieri says her campaign remains ‘‘confident she is going to be the nominee.’’

Speaking to reporters in Cleveland, Palmieri says ‘‘our strategy for getting the nomination is built around accruing more delegates. We will come out on top tonight on delegates.’’

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10:25 p.m.

GOP presidential front-runner Donald Trump says he thinks a negative ad that features clip after bleeped-out clip of him swearing publically is actually going to help him with voters.

Trump said Tuesday he was a little concerned by the ad from the American Future Fund Political Action until he saw it.

He said he thinks that ‘‘it’s better than any ad I’ve ever taken for myself.’’

Trump said he ‘‘can be more presidential than anybody’’ but that right now he’s focused on beating his rivals.

He adds that, ‘‘people are sick and tired of being politically correct.’’

Trump says that in some of the instances shows in the ad he was joking. In others, he says he was demonstrating ‘‘a certain toughness that we need in our country.’’

He adds that if he had a choice between taking the ad down and letting it run, he’d say, ‘‘let it run.’’

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10:15 p.m.

John Kasich says he’s ‘‘very pleased’’ with the results in Michigan’s primary, despite the race for second remaining too close to call between Kasich and Ted Cruz.

Speaking to an energized crowd Tuesday, Kasich said voters are beginning to hear and reward his positive campaign as the race turns to his home state of Ohio.

He’s telling the crowd he got on his hands and knees and ‘‘almost kissed the ground’’ when his plane landed in Cleveland for an event Tuesday afternoon.

Kasich has yet to win a state, but has taken second place in Massachusetts, Vermont and New Hampshire. Still, his campaign is continuing on with the belief that the primary calendar will become more favorable as more Midwestern and northern states begin voting.

Of his campaign, he says, ‘‘we struggled and worked in obscurity for a very long time.’’

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10:10 p.m.

Hillary Clinton did not mention the primary contests in Michigan or Mississippi during a rally in Cleveland Tuesday night, instead looking ahead.

Saying she expects a ‘‘busy week’’ in Ohio, which holds its crucial winner-take-all primary on March 15, Clinton said Tuesday that she was ‘‘excited to have the campaign building across this state.’’

Clinton said she was proud of the campaigns she and Bernie Sanders were running and focused her criticism instead on the Republicans.

‘‘America is great,’’ she told a cheering crowd, using GOP front-runner Donald Trump’s campaign mantra. She reiterated her call to ‘‘make it whole.’’

‘‘We are better than what we are being offered by the Republicans,’’ she said.

In Idaho, the Trump campaign used a 2012 Boise State Public Radio story containing information on where and how to vote. It also cited judicial races no longer taking place and quotes a former Idaho Republican Party official.

Peter Morrill, the radio station’s interim general manager, says no one from the Trump campaign requested permission to use the story.

Meanwhile, in states like Michigan and Arkansas, the same voter information on Trump’s state website is posted on the state’s Secretary of State website.

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9:45 p.m.

Donald Trump is expanding his lead in the race for delegates with wins in Republican primaries in Michigan and Mississippi.

Trump will win at least 21 delegates in Michigan and at least 20 in Mississippi. In Michigan, John Kasich will win at least 15 delegates and Ted Cruz will win at least 12.

There are a total of 150 Republican delegates at stake in four states Tuesday. Voters are also going to the polls in Idaho and Hawaii.

In the overall race for delegates, Trump has 428 and Cruz has 315. Rubio has 151 delegates and Kasich has 52.

It takes 1,237 delegates to win the Republican nomination for president.

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9:30 p.m.

Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump says that his wins in Tuesday’s primary elections are proof that advertising is less important than competence.

Trump has won both the Mississippi and Michigan primaries despite an onslaught of negative advertising from a late-coming ‘‘stop Trump’’ effort.

In a speech to supporters in Jupiter, Florida Tuesday after winning the two primaries, Trump said there’s never been more money spent than what is being spent to take him down.

And yet, he told his supporters, ‘‘only one person did well tonight: Donald Trump.’’

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9:15 p.m.

Donald Trump has won the Republican presidential primary in Michigan, edging out rivals to post his 14th state victory of the 2016 White House race.

It’s the second victory for Trump in Tuesday’s nomination contests. The billionaire businessman also won Mississippi’s Republican primary earlier Tuesday.

Idaho and Hawaii will also vote late Tuesday.

Heading into Tuesday’s contests, Trump led the Republican field with 384 delegates, followed by Ted Cruz with 300, Marco Rubio with 151 and John Kasich with 37. Winning the GOP nomination requires 1,237 delegates.

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8:36 p.m.

Marco Rubio is telling voters in his native Florida that the election will be decided in the state when it settles its winner-take-all contest next week.

Rubio, who campaigned Tuesday in Ponte Vedra as four states held nomination contests, urged Floridians not to allow Democrats to continue the policies of President Barack Obama. He vowed never to betray U.S. allies, specifically Israel, vowing always to be on Israel’s side.

The 44-year old Florida senator also said that while he may not be the oldest candidate, he has the most foreign policy experience and can lead the nation in decisions that impact national security.

Early voting and absentee voting have already begun in Florida ahead of the March 15 primary. So far, early preference polls show Rubio’s rival, billionaire Donald Trump, ahead in the state.

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8:35 p.m.

Donald Trump has won the Republican presidential primary in Mississippi, edging out Texas Sen. Ted Cruz to post his 13th state victory of the 2016 White House race.

The billionaire businessman extends his lead for the highly contested Republican nomination amid a growing outcry by party elites against his unorthodox candidacy.

Heading into Tuesday’s contests, Trump led the Republican field with 384 delegates, followed by Cruz with 300, Marco Rubio with 151 and John Kasich with 37. Winning the GOP nomination requires 1,237 delegates.

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8:02 p.m.

Hillary Clinton is adding to her big delegate lead after a win in Mississippi.

With 36 delegates at stake, she is assured of picking up at least 21.

Entering Tuesday’s contests, she held a 196-delegate lead over Sanders based on the results from primaries and caucuses. Still, Sanders is counting on winning several upcoming states in a bid to recapture momentum.

Also voting on Tuesday were voters in Michigan, with 130 delegates up for grabs.

Clinton’s lead is even bigger when including superdelegates, the party leaders who can support any candidate they wish. She now has at least 1,155. Sanders has at least 502. It takes 2,383 to win.

Democrats living abroad also were submitting ballots by mail in their primary, with 13 delegates at stake. Their results will be released later this month.

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8:00 p.m.

Hillary Clinton has won the Democratic presidential primary in Mississippi, riding a continuing wave of support from black voters in Southern states to claim her latest victory over Bernie Sanders.

The former secretary of state will proportionally be awarded a share of the state’s 36 delegates. Clinton had already earned 1,134 delegates in previous contests, versus 502 that have gone to Sanders.

Clinton’s number is roughly half the amount she needs to clinch the Democratic nomination for president. Her win in Mississippi comes off weekend contests in which Sanders won three out of four states.

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7:00 p.m.

Ted Cruz is going after Donald Trump’s recent move of asking rally attendees to pledge their allegiance to him.

Cruz told a crowd of 1,000 at a Kannapolis, North Carolina church on Tuesday that the move strikes him as ‘‘profoundly wrong’’ and is something ‘‘kings and queens demand’’ of their subjects.

Trump has recently begun kicking off his rallies by asking thousands of attendees to raise a hand and pledge to support him in upcoming elections, including at a rally Monday afternoon in Concord, North Carolina.

‘‘I’m not here asking any of you to pledge your support of me,’’ Cruz said, to thunderous applause and cheers. ‘‘I’m pledging my support of you.’’

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5:50 p.m.

‘‘I have no idea,’’ Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Tuesday when asked why he thought no Senate Republicans have endorsed Cruz.

‘‘It’s a circus, and I’m not part of that circus.’’

Asked if he thought he could work with a President Cruz, Reid said he wouldn’t predict how the GOP primaries will end up and added, ‘‘It’s going to be a nasty affair.’’

Sens. John Thune or John Cornyn had said Cruz would change if elected president.

‘‘Doesn’t that say a lot,’’ Schumer said of Cruz’s lack of any Senate endorsements. He said ‘‘it says something about what people think he’ll be as president.’’

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5:35 p.m.

Democratic primary voters in Michigan overwhelmingly think the government needs to do more to protect the safety of public water supplies.

Early results of the exit poll conducted for the Associated Press and television networks for Edison Research show that more than 8 in 10 Democrats voting in the state Tuesday think government regulations need to be made stronger to ensure a safe water supply, while just 1 in 10 think current regulations go far enough.

Both Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders have both drawn attention to the issue leading up to Tuesday’s primary, including at Saturday night’s debate in Flint, Michigan.

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5:25 p.m.

Most voters in Michigan and Mississippi, regardless of party, are worried about the direction of the country’s economy, and many consider trade to be a negative influence on American jobs.

According to early results of exit polls conducted by Edison Research for the Associated Press and television networks Tuesday, at least 8 in 10 voters in each primary say they are very or somewhat worried about where the American economy is headed.

More than half of Democratic and Republican voters in Michigan, along with Republicans in Mississippi, say trade with other countries takes jobs. In Mississippi, Democratic primary voters are more closely divided on the subject, with 4 in 10 saying it takes away jobs and nearly as many thinking it has a positive impact.

At least 8 in 10 Democratic voters in both states see the country’s economic system as benefiting the wealthy.